In this day and age, no. The Intel Pentium 4 534 @ 3.06GHz (Prescott core) is several years old, easily outperformed by AMD chips of it's era, and has massive overheating problems.
Nothing, a Pentium Processor, or any other processor for that matter, is merely a brand name for different microprocessors.
Officially, Windows XP requires a minimum of a 233 MHZ Pentium processor. Unofficially, with a minor patch or via hard drive swapping, any Pentium processor can be used.
Yes. The GA-6BXC can support any Slot 1 Intel Pentium II or Pentium III processor. For the faster Pentium IIIs, you will need to purchase a "slotket" to convert a Socket 370 processor to the Slot 1 interface.
As with any electronic product be it software or hardware, one can find the latest Pentium-core processor available at the Christmas season. Pentium-core processors are associated with the Dell company.
There is none. The Pentium D is based upon an older architecture and is slower, at any speed, than any Core 2 Duo processor.
Technically you case use any computer for a media center. How good it'll run as one vairys. If you're computer is a newer one with a high enough pentium processor, as well as a good video card, it'd make a great media center. The oppisite for the older, and lower edition of the pentium processor and video card.
Possibly. "Celeron" doesn't refer to any particular processor. They are cost-reduced versions of the Intel Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4, Pentium M, and Core 2 Duo. Assuming that your Celeron is based on a processor that is faster than the Pentium III, you shouldn't have any problems. If yours is based on the Pentium III, check the clock speed. A 1.2 GHz Celeron, for instance, is probably fast enough for a game that requires a 1 GHz Pentium III.Other factors, such as the graphics card of your system, may also be important.
A computer with a Pentium 4 processor can use any color for its case.
No. It is far more efficient. Essentially, it is a cost-reduced version of the Core 2 Duo, but it is still more powerful than any Pentium 4.
The Celeron is a budget version of a Pentium II or higher processor. As such, they are compatible with any computer that can run a Pentium family processor. Macs were never shipped with a Pentium processor - Intel Macs started with with the Core Duo. However, one could theoretically replace the Core Duo with an older Celeron with the same socket type.
processors and DVD burners are separate entities and do not effect compatibility. The DVD burner will work on any processor if the motherboard it is using has the correct connection for it.
Celeron doesn't refer to any particular processor series. Celerons were cost-reduced versions of their Pentium equivalents. The Celeron in question could be based on a Pentium 2, Pentium 3, Pentium 4, Pentium D, or Core 2 Duo. In which case the answers would be "Pentium 3, Usually Pentium 3, Celeron, Celeron, and Celeron", respectively.